librelist archives

License Agreement

License Agreement

From:

Moerk, Gina M

Date:

2014-10-22 @ 13:01

Hi
I know that Converse is free and an open source but just
wanted to clarify the License. Can it be integrated into a product that
is sold to a customer? Is there any license issues with that?
Thanks,
Gina Moerk
Software Engineer Assoc Mgr
Lockheed Martin MST
407.306.6724

Re: [conversejs] License Agreement

From:

Jc Brand

Date:

2014-10-23 @ 13:27

On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 01:01:54PM +0000, Moerk, Gina M wrote:
> Hi> > I know that Converse is free and an open source but just> wanted to clarify the License. Can it be integrated into a product that> is sold to a customer? Is there any license issues with that?
Converse.js is licenced under the Mozilla Public Licence (MPL).
You are free to include the code in a larger commercial product.
You will not be required to open source the entire commercial product,
however you will be required to keep all files which constitute
Converse.js itself open source.
If you modify any of the files in the Converse.js repository, you are required
to make these modifications public.
Additionally you are required to inform recipients of the product that the
source code of some of the product is under the MPL and how they can obtain a
copy of that license.
You can read the license in its entirety here:
https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/
Regards
JC

Re: EXTERNAL: Re: [conversejs] License Agreement

From:

Moerk, Gina M

Date:

2014-10-23 @ 14:33

Thanks JC - much appreciated.
Gina
-----Original Message-----
From: conversejs@librelist.com [mailto:conversejs@librelist.com] On Behalf
Of JC Brand
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2014 9:28 AM
To: conversejs@librelist.com
Subject: EXTERNAL: Re: [conversejs] License Agreement
On Wed, Oct 22, 2014 at 01:01:54PM +0000, Moerk, Gina M wrote:
> Hi> > I know that Converse is free and an open source but just> wanted to clarify the License. Can it be integrated into a product that> is sold to a customer? Is there any license issues with that?
Converse.js is licenced under the Mozilla Public Licence (MPL).
You are free to include the code in a larger commercial product.
You will not be required to open source the entire commercial product,
however you will be required to keep all files which constitute
Converse.js itself open source.
If you modify any of the files in the Converse.js repository, you are
required to make these modifications public.
Additionally you are required to inform recipients of the product that the
source code of some of the product is under the MPL and how they can
obtain a copy of that license.
You can read the license in its entirety here:
https://www.mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/
Regards
JC